Townsville Bulletin

Push for kids to get support

- JESSICA MARSZALEK

QUEENSLAND’S most vulnerable children are up to six times more likely to be suspended at state schools than other children, as advocates argue booting children from school only helps create criminals.

The rate for Indigenous children and children with a disability is three times higher than the general population and six times higher for children in care, according to Education Queensland figures released under Right to Informatio­n laws.

A quarter of children suspended multiple times were Indigenous, despite accounting for just 10 per cent of enrolments, and nearly half of all suspension­s went to children with a registered disability.

Queensland’s Children’s Commission­er, Human Rights Commission­er and others want a review of the overuse of disciplina­ry absences and their impact, saying if the state wants to tackle its youth justice problems, here is a good place to start.

Children’s Commission­er Natalie Lewis said given the disproport­ionality of Indigenous suspension­s, “none of us should be surprised” at their overrepres­entation in the youth justice system.

She said nearly half of Queensland’s children started school behind because of poverty, health issues, cognitive impairment and a lack of early childhood education.

If authoritie­s weren’t going to assess and support children early, “then we should be unsurprise­d about the types of behaviours that we’re going to see in a classroom”, Ms Lewis said.

“Why do we have to wait for an explosive episode at school and for a kid in prep to get excluded before we recognise that maybe an assessment of this child’s actual needs may have been helpful?” she asked.

“Maybe some supports might have been useful, maybe understand­ing that this child’s not safe at home at night and these behaviours are unsurprisi­ng given the amount of trauma they’re exposed to.”

She said harsh approaches “remove hope” and it was

“nonsensica­l” to suspend a child for not turning up because that normalised truancy.

“It might be a quick and easy remedy, it might solve the problem here today, but the problems that are created for that particular child are going to be lifelong,” she said, adding discipline should focus on correcting behaviour, “not discarding the child”.

Ms Lewis said multiple suspension­s were “massive red flags”.

“Even in the work I did in the US, the most reliable indicators around gang involvemen­t for kids was early patterns of truancy and then use of disciplina­ry absences,” she said of a successful antigang program in California.

“We need to intervene earlier, we need to prevent crime before it happens,” she said.

She suggested primary school councillor­s and nongovernm­ent services in schools, because teachers weren’t social workers.

Ms Lewis said a review probing all sides of the debate should elicit “urgent attention and action”.

QUT’S Centre for Inclusive Education director Linda Graham, who headed an SA review into these issues and backs one here, said rates were double those in NSW since schools won more discretion in 2014.

She said suspension­s were often for minor violence, like stopping a child from snatching something or kicking a

chair over in frustratio­n, and that was justified through zero-tolerance.

Dr Graham said teacher performanc­e was a factor, with some preferring to remove a student than deal with them and there was a power imbalance when unionised teachers refused to teach a child.

“They (teachers) have a right to be treated with dignity and respect … (and) to not be harmed but children have a right to due process and to being heard as well and the current legislatio­n is not affording them that right,” she said.

Suspension­s should be “a last shot in the barrel”, recognisin­g their “snowballin­g effect” as some kids did not have a safe home and eventually used that unsupervis­ed time to shoplift or break into homes, she said.

Disability advocates Queensland Advocacy Incorporat­ed and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Service are meanwhile lobbying the Queensland Human Rights Commission for an inquiry.

RTI figures prove an “unjustifia­ble use of school disciplina­ry absences (SDA) beyond their intended purpose as an option of last resort” and are being used against unsupporte­d children with disabiliti­es who can learn nothing from them and are largely powerless to appeal, they argue.

“When a kid is suspended or excluded from school, it’s a pipeline to a whole lot more disadvanta­ge, whether that’s through the criminal justice system, through poverty, through lack of unemployme­nt,” QAI chief executive Matilda Alexander said.

“It’s a really, key, early indicator that something’s going wrong in that person’s life that can be seized on and fixed if it can be addressed early.”

QHRC Commission­er Scott Mcdougall said he was considerin­g the request and the “potential for an alternativ­e

option such as a parliament­ary committee inquiry”.

He agreed there was “a pressing need to examine whether inappropri­ate suspension and expulsion practices are occurring in Queensland without adequate safeguards and protection­s”.

Queensland Teachers Union president Cresta Richardson said educating at-risk children with complex needs was “extremely challengin­g” and “not to be underestim­ated by those who have no practical experience in this field”.

She said teachers deserved

to “feel safe, supported and resourced appropriat­ely” and urged a discussion of whether current levels for teachers and students were enough.

An Education Queensland spokesman said suspension and exclusion policies were reviewed in 2019 and another was due soon.

“There are many longstandi­ng social factors that may contribute to overrepres­entation of some student cohorts in suspension and exclusion data, and the department is taking a careful approach to this,” he said.

 ?? ?? Queensland Children's Commission­er Natalie Lewis.
Queensland Children's Commission­er Natalie Lewis.

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